Halls Unscramble word

halls is a Scrabble word, halls uses Five letters.
Scrabble point value for halls Eight points.
Words with Friends point value for halls: Eight points.

Below are the results of unscrambling halls. We found a total of 38 words by unscrambling the letters in halls.

5 letter words made by unscrambling the letters in halls

shall 8

4 letter words made by unscrambling the letters in halls

alls 4 hall 7 hals 7 lash 7 sall 4

3 letter words made by unscrambling the letters in halls

ahs 6 all 3 als 3 ash 6 hal 6 has 6 lah 6 las 3 sah 6 sal 3 sha 6 sla 3

2 letter words made by unscrambling the letters in halls

ah 5 al 2 as 2 ha 5 hl 5 hs 5 la 2 lh 5 ll 2 ls 2 sa 2 sh 5 sl 2

Definitions of halls

British English : hall In a house or flat, the hall is the area just inside the front door.The lights were on in the hall.hɔːl NOUN

noun

  1. a room serving as an entry area within a house or building
  2. (sometimes capital) a building for public meetings
  3. (often capital) the great house of an estate; manor
  4. a large building or room used for assemblies, worship, concerts, dances, etc
  5. a residential building, esp in a university; hall of residence
  6. a large room, esp for dining, in a college or university a meal eaten in this room
  7. a large room, esp for dining, in a college or university
  8. a meal eaten in this room
  9. the large room of a house, castle, etc
  10. (US & Canadian ) a passage or corridor into which rooms open
  11. (often plural) (informal ) short for music hall
  12. a large room, esp for dining, in a college or university
  13. a meal eaten in this room

noun

  1. Charles Martin. 1863–1914, US chemist: discovered the electrolytic process for producing aluminium
  2. Sir John. 1824–1907, New Zealand statesman, born in England: prime minister of New Zealand (1879–82)
  3. Sir Peter. born 1930, English stage director: director of the Royal Shakespeare Company (1960–73) and of the National Theatre (1973–88)
  4. (Margueritte) Radclyffe. 1883–1943, British novelist and poet. Her frank treatment of a lesbian theme in the novel The Well of Loneliness (1928) led to an obscenity trial